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An Empirical Model of Wage Dispersion with Sorting

Author

Listed:
  • Rasmus Lentz

    (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

  • Jesper Bagger

    (Royal Holloway, University of London)

Abstract

This paper studies wage dispersion in an equilibrium on-the-job-search model with endogenous search intensity and wage setting through bargaining with employers competing for workers' services. Workers differ in permanent skills, firms differ in productivity. Workers can respond to mismatch by searching harder for better matches; they 'create their own luck'. This mechanism may generate labor market sorting. The model is estimated on Danish matched employer-employee data. We find that high-skilled workers tend to sort into high-productive firms. Log wage variation comprises worker heterogeneity, firm heterogeneity, imperfect labor market competition, and sorting in proportions 49%, 17%, 23% and 11%. Hence, labor market sorting is a separate and significant source of dispersion. In a counterfactual economy where workers are prevented from acting on mismatch, there is no sorting, and worker heterogeneity is found to be a much weaker contributor to wage variation, and imperfect labor market competition, effectively 'luck', a much stronger contributor. Ignoring worker's search choice may thus substantially impact our understanding wage inequality.

Suggested Citation

  • Rasmus Lentz & Jesper Bagger, 2015. "An Empirical Model of Wage Dispersion with Sorting," 2015 Meeting Papers 1345, Society for Economic Dynamics.
  • Handle: RePEc:red:sed015:1345
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Ken Burdett & Carlos Carrillo-Tudela & Melvyn Coles, 2016. "Wage Inequality: A Structural Decomposition," Review of Economic Dynamics, Elsevier for the Society for Economic Dynamics, vol. 19, pages 20-37, January.
    2. Jesper Bagger & Mads Hejlesen & Kazuhiko Sumiya & Rune Vejlin, 2018. "Income Taxation and the Equilibrium Allocation of Labor," Economics Working Papers 2018-06, Department of Economics and Business Economics, Aarhus University.
    3. Benjamin Lochner & Bastian Schulz, 2016. "Labor Market Sorting in Germany," CESifo Working Paper Series 6066, CESifo.
    4. Nancy L. Stokey, 2016. "Technology, Skill and the Wage Structure," NBER Working Papers 22176, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
    5. Nancy L Stokey, 2016. "Technology, Skill and the Wage Structure," 2016 Meeting Papers 750, Society for Economic Dynamics.
    6. Simeon Alder, 2016. "A Tale of Two C(...)s: Competence and Complementarity," 2016 Meeting Papers 1583, Society for Economic Dynamics.
    7. GORYUNOV, Maxim, 2017. "Sorting when firms have size," Economics Working Papers MWP 2017/09, European University Institute.

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